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Shareable Cards.
Brag, cleanly.

Finish a workout, tap Share, get a beautiful branded card. The map of your run, your key stats, your time of day, all rendered in PeakPulse's signature style. Drop it in a group chat, post it to your story, save it to your camera roll.

Formats Story · Square
Generation <2 sec
Customizable Stats & theme

Why screenshots don't cut it

When you finish a great run, the impulse to share is real. The current options are bad: take a screenshot of the workout summary (chrome, badges, scroll bars in the way), use Strava's share card (forces their branding, hides the bits you'd want to highlight), or build something yourself in another app (time-consuming, looks unbalanced).

PeakPulse generates a card that's made for sharing — the visual hierarchy is built around the map and the headline stat. The result looks intentional, not improvised.

If you'd be willing to print it and put it on a wall, it's good enough to put on the internet.

What's on a card

Your route Rendered as a glowing path on a topographic background. The signature look. Dark canvas, vivid signal.
Key stats Distance, time, elevation, pace. Heart rate average if you wore a monitor. Customizable per card.
Workout title Auto-generated based on time of day and terrain ("Dawn ridge run"), or whatever you wrote.
PeakPulse mark Small, in the corner. Tasteful, not loud. Earns its place.

How sharing works

  1. 01

    Open any workout summary

    Past or recent. Tap Share. The card preview appears with default stats and theme.

  2. 02

    Pick a format

    Vertical 9:16 for Instagram and TikTok stories. Square 1:1 for posts and group chats. Wide 16:9 if you're sharing somewhere wider.

  3. 03

    Tune the stats and theme

    Choose which stats to feature (up to four). Switch between dark and light themes. Toggle the route, the elevation profile, or both.

  4. 04

    Share through the system sheet

    Standard iOS share sheet. Send to Messages, post to Instagram, save to Camera Roll, paste in any app that takes images.

Privacy is the default

The card never exposes your start address. Routes are auto-cropped to hide the trailhead vicinity if it appears to be a residential area. There's also a manual "privacy crop" mode that lets you trim the route's start and end before sharing — useful if you start workouts from home.

No geocoded location names are included by default. No timestamp accurate to the second. The card shows the workout, not where you live.

Common questions

Can I share to Strava through the card?

The card is for visual sharing — stories, chats, posts. To send the actual workout data to Strava, use the dedicated Strava upload flow which preserves heart rate, segments, and everything else. The card is the brag; the upload is the record.

Can I share a card from a workout I edited in the Route Editor?

Yes. The card uses the edited version, so your cleaned-up stats and route are what gets shared.

Does the card include heart rate data?

Only if you choose to include it. The stat picker has a checkbox for each field, so you can opt out of HR, pace, or anything else you'd rather not publish.

Will the card always have PeakPulse branding?

The PeakPulse mark stays. It's small, in the corner, and we keep it deliberately understated. The card is for you — the mark is so people who see it can find the app.

Can I generate cards for group activities?

Yes. A group workout card can include the group title and a count of participants. Individual members' stats only appear with their explicit consent at card-creation time.

The brag, refined.

Shareable cards are built so what you post looks as good as how you felt.

Coming Soon to the App Store